This is a complete list of members of the United States Senate during the 83rd United States Congress listed by seniority, from January 3, 1953, to January 3, 1955.
The United States Senate is the upper chamber of the United States Congress, which along with the United States House of Representatives—the lower chamber—comprises the legislature of the United States. The Senate chamber is located in the north wing of the Capitol, in Washington, D.C.
The Eighty-third United States Congress was a meeting of the legislative branch of the federal government of the United States in Washington, D.C. from January 3, 1953, until January 3, 1955, during the last two weeks of the Truman administration, with the remainder spanning the first two years of Dwight Eisenhower's presidency. It was composed of the Senate and the House of Representatives. The apportionment of seats in the House was based on the 1950 U.S. Census. Both chambers had a Republican majority.
Order of service is based on the commencement of the senator's first term. Behind this is former service as a senator (only giving the senator seniority within his or her new incoming class), service as Vice President, a House member, a Cabinet secretary, or a governor of a state. The final factor is the population of the senator's state. [1] [2] [3] [4]
The Vice President of the United States is the second-highest officer in the executive branch of the U.S. federal government, after the President of the United States, and ranks first in the presidential line of succession. The Vice President is also an officer in the legislative branch, as President of the Senate. In this capacity, the Vice President presides over Senate deliberations, but may not vote except to cast a tie-breaking vote. The Vice President also presides over joint sessions of Congress.
The United States House of Representatives is the lower chamber of the United States Congress, the Senate being the upper chamber. Together they compose the legislature of the United States.
In the United States, a governor serves as the chief executive officer and commander-in-chief in each of the fifty states and in the five permanently inhabited territories, functioning as both head of state and head of government therein. As such, governors are responsible for implementing state laws and overseeing the operation of the state executive branch. As state leaders, governors advance and pursue new and revised policies and programs using a variety of tools, among them executive orders, executive budgets, and legislative proposals and vetoes. Governors carry out their management and leadership responsibilities and objectives with the support and assistance of department and agency heads, many of whom they are empowered to appoint. A majority of governors have the authority to appoint state court judges as well, in most cases from a list of names submitted by a nominations committee.
Senators who were sworn in during the middle of the two-year congressional term (up until the last senator who was not sworn in early after winning the November 1954 election) are listed at the end of the list with no number.
Class | Terms of service of senators that will expire in years |
---|---|
Class 2 | Terms of service of senators that will expire in 1955 [5] |
Class 3 | Terms of service of senators that will expire in 1957 [6] |
Class 1 | Terms of service of senators that will expire in 1959 [7] |
Rank | Senator (party-state) | Seniority date | Other factors |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Walter F. George (D-GA) | November 22, 1922 | |
2 | Carl Hayden (D-AZ) | March 4, 1927 | |
3 | Richard Russell, Jr. (D-GA) | January 12, 1933 | |
4 | Harry F. Byrd Sr. (D-VA) | March 4, 1933 | Former governor |
5 | Pat McCarran [8] (D-NV) | ||
6 | James Murray (D-MT) | November 7, 1934 | |
7 | Dennis Chavez (D-NM) | May 11, 1935 | |
8 | Edwin C. Johnson (D-CO) | January 3, 1937 | Former governor, Colorado 33rd in population (1930) |
9 | Theodore F. Green (D-RI) | Former governor, Rhode Island 37th in population (1930) | |
10 | Styles Bridges (R-NH) | Former governor, New Hampshire 41st in population (1930) | |
11 | Allen J. Ellender (D-LA) | ||
12 | Joseph Hill (D-AL) | January 11, 1938 | |
13 | Charles W. Tobey [9] (R-NH) | January 3, 1939 | Former representative (2 years), former governor |
14 | Robert A. Taft [10] (R-OH) | Ohio 4th in population (1930) | |
15 | Alexander Wiley (R-WI) | Wisconsin 13th in population (1930) | |
16 | William Langer (R-ND) | January 3, 1941 | Former governor |
17 | Harley M. Kilgore (D-WV) | West Virginia 27th in population (1930) | |
18 | Hugh A. Butler [11] (R-NE) | Nebraska 32nd in population (1930) | |
19 | George Aiken (R-VT) | January 10, 1941 | |
20 | Burnet R. Maybank [12] (D-SC) | November 5, 1941 | |
21 | Eugene D. Millikin (R-CO) | December 20, 1941 | |
22 | James Eastland (D-MS) | January 3, 1943 | Previously a senator |
23 | Homer S. Ferguson (R-MI) | Michigan 7th in population (1940) | |
24 | John Little McClellan (D-AR) | Arkansas 25th in population (1940) | |
25 | Guy Cordon (R-OR) | March 4, 1944 | |
26 | Howard A. Smith (R-NJ) | December 7, 1944 | |
27 | Warren G. Magnuson (D-WA) | December 14, 1944 | |
28 | J. William Fulbright (D-AR) | January 3, 1945 | Former representative (2 years) |
29 | Clyde R. Hoey [13] (D-NC) | Former governor | |
30 | Bourke B. Hickenlooper (R-IA) | Former governor, Iowa 20th in population (1940) | |
31 | Olin D. Johnston (D-SC) | Former governor, South Carolina 26th in population (1940) | |
32 | Homer E. Capehart (R-IN) | Indiana 12th in population (1940) | |
33 | Wayne Morse (I/D-OR) | Oregon 34th in population (1940) | |
34 | Leverett Saltonstall (R-MA) | January 4, 1945 | |
35 | Milton Young (R-ND) | March 12, 1945 | |
36 | William F. Knowland (R-CA) | August 26, 1945 | |
37 | Spessard Holland (D-FL) | September 24, 1946 | |
38 | Ralph Flanders (R-VT) | November 1, 1946 | |
39 | A. Willis Robertson (D-VA) | November 6, 1946 | Former representative (13 years, 10 months) |
40 | John Sparkman (D-AL) | Former representative (9 years, 10 months) | |
41 | William E. Jenner (R-IN) | January 3, 1947 | Previously a senator |
42 | Edward Martin (R-PA) | Former governor, Pennsylvania 2nd in population (1940) | |
43 | John W. Bricker (R-OH) | Former governor, Ohio 4th in population (1940) | |
44 | Edward John Thye (R-MN) | Former governor, Minnesota 18th in population (1940) | |
45 | Irving Ives (R-NY) | New York 1st in population (1940) | |
46 | Joseph McCarthy (R-WI) | Wisconsin 13th in population (1940) | |
47 | Arthur Vivian Watkins (R-UT) | Utah 40th in population (1940) | |
48 | John J. Williams (R-DE) | Delaware 47th in population (1940) | |
49 | George W. Malone (R-NV) | Nevada 48th in population (1940) | |
50 | John C. Stennis (D-MS) | November 17, 1947 | |
51 | Karl Mundt (R-SD) | December 31, 1948 | Former representative (9 years) |
52 | Russell B. Long (D-LA) | ||
53 | Matthew M. Neely (D-WV) | January 3, 1949 | Previously a senator (twice) (total tenure 15 years, 10 months) |
54 | Guy Mark Gillette (D-IA) | Previously a senator (8 years, 2 months) | |
55 | Lyndon Johnson (D-TX) | Former representative (12 years) | |
56 | Estes Kefauver (D-TN) | Former representative (10 years) | |
57 | Margaret Chase Smith (R-ME) | Former representative (8 years, 7 months) | |
58 | Clinton Anderson (D-NM) | Former cabinet secretary | |
59 | Robert S. Kerr (D-OK) | Former governor, Oklahoma 22nd in population (1940) | |
60 | Andrew F. Schoeppel (R-KS) | Former governor, Kansas 29th in population (1940) | |
61 | Lester C. Hunt [14] (D-WY) | Former governor, Wyoming 46th in population (1940) | |
62 | Paul Douglas (D-IL) | Illinois 3rd in population (1940) | |
63 | Robert C. Hendrickson (R-NJ) | New Jersey 9th in population (1940) | |
64 | Hubert Humphrey (D-MN) | Minnesota 18th in population (1940) | |
65 | Joseph Frear, Jr. (D-DE) | Delaware 47th in population (1940) | |
66 | Henry Dworshak (R-ID) | October 14, 1949 | |
67 | Herbert H. Lehman (D-NY) | November 9, 1949 | |
68 | Frank Carlson (R-KS) | November 27, 1950 | Former representative (12 years), former governor |
69 | Earle C. Clements (D-KY) | Former representative (3 years), former governor | |
70 | Willis Smith [15] (D-NC) | ||
71 | John O. Pastore (D-RI) | December 19, 1950 | |
72 | Everett Dirksen (R-IL) | January 3, 1951 | Former representative (16 years) |
73 | Francis H. Case (R-SD) | Former representative (14 years) | |
74 | Almer Monroney (D-OK) | Former representative (12 years) | |
75 | Thomas C. Hennings, Jr. (D-MO) | Former representative (6 years) | |
76 | George Smathers (D-FL) | Former representative (4 years) | |
77 | John M. Butler (R-MD) | Maryland 28th in population (1940) | |
78 | Herman Welker (R-ID) | Idaho 43rd in population (1940) | |
79 | Wallace F. Bennett (R-UT) | Utah 40th in population (1940) | |
80 | James H. Duff (R-PA) | January 16, 1951 | |
81 | John Sherman Cooper (R-KY) | November 5, 1952 | Previously a senator |
82 | Charles E. Potter (R-MI) | Former representative (5 years, 2 months) | |
83 | Dwight Griswold [16] (R-NE) | Former governor | |
84 | Prescott Bush (R-CT) | ||
85 | Thomas Kuchel (R-CA) | January 2, 1953 | |
86 | William A. Purtell (R-CT) | January 3, 1953 | Previously a senator |
87 | Albert Gore, Sr. (D-TN) | Former representative (14 years) | |
88 | Henry M. Jackson (D-WA) | Former representative (12 years) | |
89 | James Glenn Beall (R-MD) | Former representative (10 years), Maryland 24th in population (1950) | |
90 | Mike Mansfield (D-MT) | Former representative (10 years), Montana 42nd in population (1950) | |
91 | John F. Kennedy (D-MA) | Former representative (6 years) | |
92 | Frederick G. Payne (R-ME) | Former governor, Maine 35th in population (1950) | |
93 | Frank A. Barrett (R-WY) | Former governor, Wyoming 48th in population (1950) | |
94 | Price Daniel (D-TX) | Texas 6th in population (1950) | |
95 | Stuart Symington (D-MO) | Missouri 12th in population (1950) | |
96 | Barry Goldwater (R-AZ) | Arizona 37th in population (1950) | |
— | Alton Asa Lennon (D-NC) | July 10, 1953 | |
— | Robert W. Upton (R-NH) | August 14, 1953 | |
— | Thomas A. Burke (D-OH) | November 10, 1953 | |
— | Eva Bowring [17] (D-NE) | April 16, 1954 | |
— | Sam Ervin (D-NC) | June 5, 1954 | |
— | Edward D. Crippa (R-WY) | June 24, 1954 | |
— | Samuel W. Reynolds (R-NE) | July 3, 1954 | |
— | Charles E. Daniel (D-SC) | September 6, 1954 | |
— | Ernest S. Brown (R-NV) | October 1, 1954 | |
— | Norris Cotton (R-NH) | November 8, 1954 | Former representative (7 years, 10 months) |
— | Roman Hruska (R-NE) | Former representative (1 year, 10 months) | |
— | Hazel Abel [18] (R-NE) | ||
— | Joseph O'Mahoney (D-WY) | November 29, 1954 | Previously a senator |
— | W. Kerr Scott (D-NC) | Former governor | |
— | Alan Bible (D-NV) | December 2, 1954 | |
— | George H. Bender (R-OH) | December 16, 1954 | |
— | Strom Thurmond [19] (I-SC) | December 24, 1954 | |
— | Carl Curtis (R-NE) | January 1, 1955 |